(Molly Bruns, Headline USA) During a portion of a World Economic Forum anti-disinformation panel, a United Nations representative announced that the UN’s globalist administrators “own the science” when referencing “climate information.”
At the WEF’s “Sustainable Development Impact Meeting,” participants from the UN, CNN and Brown University discussed best ways to control the flow of information in the “Tackling Disinformation” panel, the Post Millennial reported.
Melissa Fleming, the UN’s undersecretary-general for global communications, mentioned the UN’s partnership with tech companies TikTok and Google, both of which assist in the control of the climate-change narrative.
She said that when Google users search the term “climate change” in the engine, many UN resources will be the first to appear.
“We started this partnership when we were shocked to see that when we Googled ‘climate change,’ we were getting incredibly distorted information right at the top,” she said.
“We’re becoming much more proactive. We own the science, and we think that the world should know it, and the platforms themselves also do,” she said.
WEF member explains how they partnered with Google to ensure UN resources were displayed first when people search for climate change: “We own the science.” pic.twitter.com/GYnil5F546
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) October 2, 2022
Fleming also mentioned that the UN collaborated with TikTok on a project they called “Team Halo,” which worked to boost specific COVID narratives on the Chinese-owned video platform.
“We had another trusted messenger project, which was called ‘Team Halo’ where we trained scientists around the world and some doctors on TikTok, and we had TikTok working with us,” Fleming said.
She also admitted that a way they countered people’s distrust of institutions—such as the UN in relation to COVID—was to get influencers to send out their messaging.
“Another really key strategy we had was to deploy influencers,” she said, adding, “influencers who were really keen, who have huge followings, but really keen to help carry messages that were going to serve their communities, and they were much more trusted than the United Nations telling them something from New York City headquarters.”